DW and BOLD MR imaging are feasible and reproducible in patients with renal allografts.
Biochemical maturation of the brain can be studied noninvasively by 1 H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in human infants. Detailed time courses of cerebral tissue contents are known for the most abundant metabolites only, and whether or not premature birth affects biochemical maturation of the brain is disputed. Hence, the last trimester of gestation was observed in infants born prematurely, and their cerebral metabolite contents at birth and at expected term were compared with those of fullterm infants. Successful quantitative short-TE 1 H MRS was performed in three cerebral locations in 21 infants in 28 sessions (gestational age 32-43 weeks). The spectra were analyzed with linear combination model fitting, considerably extending the range of observable metabolites to include acetate, alanine, aspartate, cholines, creatines, ␥-aminobutyrate, glucose, glutamine, glutamate, glutathione, glycine, lactate, myo-inositol, macromolecular contributions, N-acetylaspartate, N-acetylaspartylglutamate, o-phosphoethanolamine, scyllo-inositol, taurine, and threonine. Significant effects of age and location were found for many metabolites, including the previously observed neuronal maturation reflected by an increase in N-acetylaspartate. Absolute brain metabolite content in premature infants at term was not considerably different from that in fullterm infants, indicating that prematurity did not affect biochemical brain maturation substantially in the studied population, which did not include infants of extremely low birthweight. Magn Reson Med 48:949 -958, 2002.
Absolute quantitation of clinical 1H-MR spectra is virtually always incomplete for single subjects because the separate determination of spectrum, baseline, and transverse and longitudinal relaxation times in single subjects is prohibitively long. Integrated Processing and Acquisition of Data (IPAD) based on a combined 2-dimensional experimental and fitting strategy is suggested to substantially improve the information content from a given measurement time. A series of localized saturation-recovery spectra was recorded and combined with 2-dimensional prior-knowledge fitting to simultaneously determine metabolite T 1 (from analysis of the saturation-recovery time course), metabolite T 2 (from lineshape analysis based on metabolite and water peak shapes), macromolecular baseline (based on T 1 differences and analysis of the saturation-recovery time course), and metabolite concentrations (using prior knowledge fitting and conventional procedures of absolute standardization). The procedure was tested on metabolite solutions and applied in 25 subjects (15-78 years old). Metabolite content was comparable to previously found values. Interindividual variation was larger than intraindividual variation in repeated spectra for metabolite content as well as for some relaxation times. Relaxation times were different for various metabolite groups. Parts of the interindividual variation could be explained by significant age dependence of relaxation times. (1) is to sequentially acquire all information needed for absolute quantitative information from localized spectra: (1) the spectrum to be fitted and quantitated, (2) a series of measurements for the determination of longitudinal relaxation times (multiple repetition times, saturation recovery, or inversion recovery), (3) a further series of spectra for the evaluation of transverse relaxation times (obtained with differing echo times), (4) further measurements for the experimental determination of the macromolecular baseline (MM-BL) signals (metabolite nulling (2) or saturation recovery (3)), and (5) reference measurements for absolute quantitation. Because the experimental time needed to record all this information is generally too long for a clinical examination in a single subject, true absolute quantitation is hardly ever performed in research, let alone the clinic. Alternatively, the necessary measurements can be split into different sessions, but more often relaxation times are approximated from literature values or from measurements in a group of similar subjects. The latter clearly entails the risk of missing or misinterpreting metabolic changes. One route to approach full quantitation in one single examination is to try to obtain higher signal to noise by using optimized hardware (RF coil or higher B 0 field) and/or a very large region of interest, which alleviates the need for long data accumulation. However, often neither one of these options is available or sufficient. An alternative way of minimizing the necessary scan time, based on Integrated Processing and Ac...
Hypoxia of renal medulla is a key factor implicated in the development of drug-induced renal failure. Drugs are known to influence renal hemodynamics and, subsequently, affect renal tissue oxygenation. Changes in renal oxygenation can be assessed non-invasively in humans using blood oxygenation level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-MRI). This study was designed to test the acute effects of administration of specific drugs in healthy human kidney oxygenation using BOLD-MRI. Acute changes in renal tissue oxygenation induced by the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug indomethacin, the iodinated radio-contrast media (RCM) iopromidum, and the calcineurin inhibitors cyclosporine micro-emulsion (CsA-ME) and tracrolimus were studied in 30 healthy volunteers. A modified Multi Echo Data Image Combination sequence was used to acquire 12 T(2)(*)-weighted images. Four coronal slices were selected to cover both kidneys. The mean R(2)(*) (1/T(2)(*)) values determined in medulla and cortex showed no significant changes induced by indomethacin and tacrolimus administration. CsA-ME decreased medullary (P=0.008) and cortical (P=0.004) R(2)(*) values 2 h after ingestion. Iopromidum caused a significant increase in medullary R(2)(*) within the first 20 min after injection (P<0.001), whereas no relevant changes were observed in renal cortex. None of the measurements showed left-right kidney differences. Significant differences in renal medullary oxygenation were evidenced between female and male subjects (P=0.013). BOLD-MRI was efficient to show effects of specific drugs in healthy renal tissue. Cyclosporine increased renal medullary oxygenation 2 h after ingestion of a single dose, whereas indomethacin and tacrolimus showed no effect on renal oxygenation. Injection of iodinated RCM decreased renal medullary oxygenation.
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